| Literature DB >> 25977927 |
Giulia Gigliobianco1, Sabiniano Roman Regueros1, Nadir I Osman2, Julio Bissoli3, Anthony J Bullock1, Chris R Chapple4, Sheila MacNeil1.
Abstract
Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) and pelvic organ prolapse (POP) are major health issues that detrimentally impact the quality of life of millions of women worldwide. Surgical repair is an effective and durable treatment for both conditions. Over the past two decades there has been a trend to enforce or reinforce repairs with synthetic and biological materials. The determinants of surgical outcome are many, encompassing the physical and mechanical properties of the material used, and individual immune responses, as well surgical and constitutional factors. Of the current biomaterials in use none represents an ideal. Biomaterials that induce limited inflammatory response followed by constructive remodelling appear to have more long term success than biomaterials that induce chronic inflammation, fibrosis and encapsulation. In this review we draw upon published animal and human studies to characterize the changes biomaterials undergo after implantation and the typical host responses, placing these in the context of clinical outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25977927 PMCID: PMC4419215 DOI: 10.1155/2015/968087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Cartoon of how patients can respond to materials implanted in the pelvic floor: (a) mechanical failure, (b) material recognized as non-self and isolated from body tissues with encapsulation, (c) exposure (erosion), and (d) optimal result for implanted material.
Autologous fascia.
| Author | Sample | Biomechanical properties | Host response |
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FitzGerald et al., 2000 [ | Autologous rectus fascia implanted in 5 patients suffering from SUI. Samples obtained, respectively, from transvaginal revision after 3, 5, 8, and 17 weeks and from replacement after 4 years. | (i) Moderate and uniform infiltration of host fibroblasts and neovascularization after 5 and 8 weeks of implantation. | |
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| Jeong et al., 2000 [ | Autologous lata fascia implanted in 16 rabbits randomized into 4 survival groups and examined after 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks. Implantation into upper eyelids. | (i) Low inflammatory cell infiltration. | |
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| Choe et al., 2001 [ | Dermis, rectus fascia, and vaginal mucosa harvested from 20 women undergoing vagina prolapse surgery. | Tensiometric analysis of full strips versus patch suture slings. Displacement and maximum load calculated. | |
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| Kim et al., 2001 [ | Autologous rectus fascia implanted in 20 rats randomized into 2 survival groups (2 and 4 months). | No significant decrease of the fracture toughness calculated by the trouser tear test over 4 months. | |
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| Dora et al., 2004 [ | Autologous rectus fascia implanted in 15 rabbits randomized into 3 survival groups (2, 6, and 12 weeks). Implantation on the anterior rectus fascia. | No significant decrease of biomechanical properties after 12 weeks of implantation. | 50% decrease in surface area. |
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| Hilger et al., 2006 [ | Autologous rectus fascia implanted in 20 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). Half implanted on the rectus fascia and half on the posterior vagina fascia. | No significant decrease of biomechanical properties after 12 weeks of implantation. | (i) Collagen remodeling by moderate collagen infiltration but encapsulation as well. |
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| Krambeck et al., 2006 [ | Autologous rectus fascia implanted subcutaneously on the anterior rectus fascia of 10 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). | (i) Moderate fibrosis. | |
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de Almeida et al., 2007 [ | Adult female rats incontinence model. Marlex, autologous sling, SIS, polypropylene mesh, and sham at 30 and 60 days. | Reduced inflammatory response and collagen production around autologous grafts, in comparison with synthetic materials and xenografts. | |
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| Woodruff et al., 2008 [ | Autologous fascia grafts explanted after sling revision from 5 women, due to different complications, between 2 and 65 months after implantation. | (i) Moderate and uniform infiltration of host fibroblasts and little neovascularization. | |
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de Rezende Pinna et al., 2011 [ | Autologous fascia lata implanted in 14 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (30 and 60 days). Implantation into the right voice muscle. | (i) No significant inflammatory reaction. | |
Allografts.
| Author | Sample | Biomechanical properties | Host response |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sclafani et al., 2000 [ | Human cadaveric dermis (AlloDerm) disk implanted subdermally behind a patient's ear. Micronized human cadaveric dermis (AlloDerm) injected intradermally and subdermally in 2 different locations behind a patient's ear. Both implants were examined 3 months and 1 month after implantation, respectively. | (i) Both materials extensively invaded by host fibroblasts. | |
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| Kim et al., 2001 [ | Human cadaveric fascia implanted in 20 rats randomized into 2 survival groups (2 and 4 months). | No significant decrease of the fracture toughness calculated by the trouser tear test. | |
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| Walter et al., 2003 [ | Freeze-dried and gamma-irradiated human cadaveric lata fascia implanted in 18 rabbits and excised 12 weeks after implantation. | Significant decrease of biomechanical properties after 12 weeks of implantation. | |
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| Spiess et al., 2004 [ | Human cadaveric fascia lata implanted subcutaneously on the abdominal wall of 20 rats randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). | No significant decrease of tensile strength with time. | |
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| Yildirim et al., 2005 [ | Human cadaveric lata fascia implanted subcutaneously on the abdominal wall in 20 rabbits randomized into 4 survival groups (2, 7, 15, and 30 days). | (i) Acute inflammation by high cell infiltration predominantly of polymorphous granulocytes. | |
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| Krambeck et al., 2006 [ | Cadaveric fascia lata implanted subcutaneously on the anterior rectus fascia of 10 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). | (i) Moderate to high focal fibrosis. | |
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| Hilger et al., 2006 [ | Human cadaveric dermis and lata fascia implanted in 20 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). Half implanted on the rectus fascia and half on the posterior vagina fascia. | Very significant decrease of biomechanical properties after 12 weeks of implantation. | (i) Two missing or fragmented materials implanted on the vagina after 12 weeks. |
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| Woodruff et al., 2008 [ | Human cadaveric dermis slings explanted after revision from 2 women, due to different complications, between 2 and 65 months after implantation. | (i) Moderate levels of encapsulation. | |
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| VandeVord et al., 2010 [ | Human cadaveric dermis and fascia lata implanted in 16 rats, respectively, and both randomized into 4 survival groups (2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks). Implantation around the bladder neck, anchored to the surrounding tissues. | (i) Thin fibrous capsule formation. | |
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| Rice et al., 2010 [ | Human cadaveric dermis (AlloDerm) implanted in 18 rats randomized into 2 survival groups (30 and 60 days). Subcutaneous implantation on abdominis rectus muscle defect. | Increase of tensile strength after 30 days and, again, increase of tensile strength after 60 days, respectively, to 30 days. | (i) Moderate amounts of collagen deposition well organized. |
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| Kolb et al., 2012 [ | Human cadaveric dermis (AlloDerm) implanted subcutaneously in 5 pigs randomized into 4 survival groups (7, 21, 90, and 180 days). | (i) Robust inflammatory response after 7 days of implantation, which achieved maximal level at 21 days, with formation of granulomas and areas of necrosis noted within the graft. | |
Xenografts.
| Author | Sample | Biomechanical properties | Host response |
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| Badylak et al., 2001 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with SIS in 40 dogs randomized into 8 survival groups (1, 4, 7, and 10 days and 1, 3, 6, and 24 months). | Strength was decreased from day 1 to day 10 after implantation, followed by a progressive increase, until reaching double of the original strength 24 months after implantation. | Rapid degradation with associated and subsequent host remodeling. |
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| Badylak et al., 2002 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with SIS in 10 dogs and 30 rats, both randomized into 4 survival groups (1 week, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 2 years). | (i) No shrinkage or expansion of the graft site over the 2-year period of the study. | |
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| Cole et al., 2003 [ | SIS removed from a 42-year-old female patient 4 months after pubovaginal implantation of the sling due to severe obstruction. | (i) Completely intact acellular sling. | |
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| Zhang et al., 2003 [ | SIS implanted in the abdominal wall of rats for up to 2 months. | SIS together with the abdominal wall has increased strength. | Levels of interleukin 2 and interleukin 6 were high straight after the operation but they become normal after 2 months. |
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| Wiedemann and Otto, 2004 [ | Biopsies taken from the implantation site of the SIS band under the vaginal mucosa from 3 patients during reoperation, at a mean of 12.7 months, after pubourethral sling procedures due to recurrent urinary stress incontinence. | (i) Focal residues of SIS implant. | |
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| Konstantinovic et al., 2005 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with SIS in 24 Wistar rats randomized into 4 survival groups (7, 14, 30, and 90 days). | Significant increase of biomechanical properties after 90 days of implantation. | (i) Moderate acute inflammatory response at day 7, decreased to minimal after 90 days. |
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| Macleod et al., 2005 [ | SIS and cross-linked porcine dermis (Permacol) implanted subcutaneously on the anterior rectus fascia of 18 rats each randomized into 5 survival groups (1, 2, 4, 10, and 20 weeks). | For both grafts: | |
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| Poulose et al., 2005 [ | 12 female pigs were implanted with SIS intraperitoneally for up to 6 weeks. | (i) Cell infiltration. | |
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| Thiel et al., 2005 [ | SIS implanted subcutaneously on the abdominal wall of 30 rats randomized into 3 survival groups (7, 30, and 90 days). | (i) Moderate inflammatory reaction increased to severe after 90 days. | |
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| Krambeck et al., 2006 [ | SIS and porcine dermis implanted subcutaneously on the anterior rectus fascia of 10 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). | (i) Porcine dermis presented moderate fibrosis which was minimal for SIS. | |
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| Ko et al., 2006 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with 8-layer SIS in 20 domestic pigs randomized into 2 survival groups (1 and 4 months). | No significant changes of biomechanical properties after 4 months of implantation. | (i) Dense fibrous connective tissue ingrowth. |
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| Hilger et al., 2006 [ | Porcine dermis implanted in 20 rabbits randomized into 2 survival groups (6 and 12 weeks). Half implanted on the rectus fascia and half on the posterior vagina fascia. | Very significant decrease of biomechanical properties after 12 weeks of implantation. | (i) Two missing or fragmented materials 12 weeks after being implanted on the vagina. |
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| Kim et al., 2007 [ | SIS implanted in the subcutaneous dorsum of 3 rats sacrificed after 2 weeks. | (i) Prominent infiltration and ingrowth of host cells. | |
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| Rauth et al., 2007 [ | SIS implanted on the peritoneal surface of the abdominal wall of 6 pigs sacrificed 8 weeks after implantation. | (i) 80% of contraction from original surface area. | |
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| Woodruff et al., 2008 [ | Porcine dermis slings explanted after revision from 4 women, due to different complications, between 2 and 65 months after implantation. | (i) Severe encapsulation. | |
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| Sandor et al., 2008 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with SIS and cross-linked porcine dermis (Permacol) in 33 primates randomized into 3 survival groups (1, 3, and 6 months). | (i) Considerable contraction after 1 month for both materials, but not significant change over the next 5 months. | |
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| Pierce et al., 2009 [ | Cross-linked porcine dermis implanted on the abdominal wall and posterior vagina of 18 rabbits sacrificed 9 months after implantation. | 11 grafts remained intact without significant changes of biomechanical properties compared to the baseline values. They were just thicker and tolerated with less elongation at failure. Seven grafts were partially degraded but thicker again and with significant decrease of all biomechanical properties. | (i) Host connective tissue incorporation between fibers. |
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| VandeVord et al., 2010 [ | SIS and porcine dermis implanted in 16 rats, respectively, and both randomized into 4 survival groups (2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks). Implantation around the bladder neck, anchored to the surrounding tissues. | (i) Thin fibrous capsule formation. | |
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| Rice et al., 2010 [ | Abdominal wall defect repair with SIS (Surgisis) in 18 rats randomized into 2 survival groups (30 and 60 days). | Increase of tensile strength after 30 days and, increase of tensile strength after 60 days, respectively, to 30 days. | (i) Moderate amounts of collagen deposition well organized. |
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| Deprest et al., 2010 [ | 13 patients underwent secondary sacrocolpopexy because of a graft related complication after the initial sacrocolpopexy with porcine dermal collagen (Pelvicol) (9) or SIS (Surgisis) (4). | (i) Pelvicol presented high degradation rates associated with no foreign body reaction. | |
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| Liu et al., 2011 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with SIS and acellular porcine dermal matrix in 50 Sprague Dawley rats randomized into 5 survival groups (1, 2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks). | After initial decrease of biomechanical properties at week 2, these were increased over the next 10 weeks reaching similar values to week 1. | (i) Pronounced inflammatory response 1 to 4 weeks after implantation for SIS compared with porcine dermis, but falling to similar negligible values for both after 12 weeks. |
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| Jenkins et al., 2011 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with porcine dermal matrix in 24 Yucatan minipigs randomized into 2 survival groups (1 and 6 months). | Significantly greater incorporation strengths after 6 months compared with 1 month. | (i) Moderate cell infiltration. |
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| Kolb et al., 2012 [ | Cross-linked porcine dermis (Permacol) implanted subcutaneously in 5 pigs randomized into 4 survival groups (7, 21, 90, and 180 days). | (i) Mild inflammatory response decreased to minimal from day 7 to day 180 after implantation. | |
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| Daly et al., 2012 [ | Abdominal wall defect repaired with porcine dermis in rats randomized into 3 survival groups (1, 3, and 35 days). | (i) Cell infiltrates into all grafts by day 35. | |
Polypropylene meshes.
| Author | Sample | Biomechanical properties | Host response |
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| Falconer et al., 2001 [ | 16 women were implanted with TVT for up to 2 years: 6 with Mersilene and 10 with Prolene. | Mersilene induces higher inflammatory response than Prolene. Mersilene is easier to extract than Prolene. | |
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| Klinge et al., 2002 [ | Heavy weight monofilament with small pore size (HWM) and low weight with large pore size multifilament (LWM) on the posterior abdominal wall of rats for 7, 14, 21, and 90 days. | (i) HWM: intense inflammation, embedded in connective tissue. | |
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| Wang et al., 2004 [ | 17 women with sling erosion and 7 women with voiding difficulties implanted with TVT and SPARC. | Pronounced fibrosis around the fibers—erosion and voiding difficulty as a result. | |
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| Rabah et al., 2004 [ | Implantation of Surgipro and cadaveric fascia lata in rabbit's bladder neck for 6 and 12 weeks. | (i) Cadaveric fascia lata group: the implant was incorporated in a plate of fibrous tissue. | |
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| Spiess et al., 2004 [ | TVT and cadaveric fascia lata implanted in abdominal wall of rats for 6 and 12 weeks. | TVT has the greater break load and the maximum average load compared to cadaveric fascia lata. | |
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| Zheng et al., 2004 [ | Prolene and Pelvicol implanted in full thickness abdominal wall defects in rats for 7, 14, 30, and 90 days. | Prolene prosthesis shows the presence of leukocytes in the activated state. | |
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| Konstantinovic et al., 2005 [ | Marlex and non-cross-linked Surgisis implanted on the anterior abdominal wall of rats for 7, 14, 30, and 90 days. | (i) Marlex: more pronounced inflammatory reaction and vascularization throughout the graft than Surgisis | |
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| Yildirim et al., 2005 [ | Gynecare TVT, SPARC, polypropylene mesh, and IVS implanted in contact with the rats rectus muscle for up to 30 days. | Inflammation and fibrosis are decreased in large pore meshes. | |
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| Thiel et al., 2005 [ | Monofilament polypropylene mesh, silicone mesh, SIS, and PLA were implanted subcutaneously on the abdomen of rats for 7, 30, and 90 days. | Polypropylene induces the mildest inflammatory response among the samples. | |
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| Bogusiewicz et al., 2006 [ | Monofilament TVT and multifilament IVS were implanted in rats rectus fascia for 42 days. | (i) They induce production of similar amount of collagen. | |
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| Boulanger et al., 2006 [ | Vicryl, Vypro, Prolene, Prolene Soft, and Mersuture were implanted in pigs peritoneum for 10 weeks. | (i) Vicryl: low level of inflammation and completely absorbed. | |
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| Krambeck et al., 2006 [ | SPARC mesh, human cadaveric fascia, porcine dermis, SIS, and autologous fascia were implanted in rabbits rectus fascia for 12 weeks. | (i) Polypropylene mesh has the greatest scar formation. | |
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| Boukerrou et al., 2007 [ | Preperitoneal implantation of Vicryl, Vypro, Prolene, Prolene Soft, and Mersuture mesh for 2 months in pigs. | Nonabsorbable, monofilamentous, macroporous materials (type I) seem more resistant, retract less, and have the best tolerance. | . |
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| Spelzini et al., 2007 [ | Polypropylene type I mesh and macroporous silk construct were implanted in rat fascial defects for 7, 14, 30, and 90 days. | Polypropylene meshes induce a moderate inflammatory response and not architectural degradation. | |
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| Zorn et al., 2007 [ | Rat abdominal wall was implanted with SPARC, TVT, and SIS for 6 weeks and 9, 6, 9, and 12 months. | TVT has tensile properties similar to SPARC and they are superior to Stratasis. | |
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| Bazi et al., 2007 [ | Rats rectus fascia was implanted with Advantage, IVS, SPARC, and TVT for up to 24 weeks. | They all show similar mechanical properties after removal. | They induce different host responses due to different porosity. |
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| Tayrac et al., 2007 | Ewes vaginas were implanted with a noncoated LW polypropylene mesh (Soft Prolene) and a coated one (Ugytex) from 1 to 12 weeks. | Similar inflammatory response between the two materials. | |
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| Huffaker et al., 2008 [ | Rabbits vaginas were implanted with Pelvitex (collagen-coated) and Gynemesh (uncoated polypropylene meshes) for up to 12 weeks. | Both materials induce a mild foreign body reaction with minimal fibrosis. | |
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| Woodruff et al., 2008 [ | 24 grafts were explanted in women undergoing sling revision after 2–34 months. Grafts were polypropylene meshes, autologous fascia, porcine dermis, and cadaveric dermis. | No evidence of degradation or encapsulation, abundant host infiltration. Neovascularisation was visible. | |
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| Elmer et al., 2009 [ | Prolift was implanted in humans for 1 year. | (i) Increase in macrophages and mast cells count. | |
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| Pierce et al., 2009 [ | Polypropylene mesh versus cross-linked porcine dermis implanted in rabbits vagina and abdomen for 9 months. | Polypropylene caused milder inflammatory reaction, more long term, good host tissue incorporation. | |
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| Melman et al., 2011 [ | Bard mesh (HWPP), Ultrapro (LWPP), and GORE INFINIT Mesh (ePTFE) in minipigs hernia repair for 1, 3, and 5 months. | Their maximum tensile strength decreases for all of them. | (i) Inflammation decreases with time. |
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| Pascual et al., 2012 [ | Surgipro, Optilene, and GORE INFINIT Mesh (ePTFE) were implanted in rabbits abdominal wall defect for 14 days. | LWPP implants might be improved by the newly formed tissue around it. | (i) PTFE induces an increased macrophage response when compared to polypropylene. |
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| Manodoro et al., 2013 [ | Gynemesh in two sizes (50 × 50 mm and 35 × 35 mm) implanted in 20 adult ewes for 60 and 90 days, both on the abdominal and vaginal walls. | Implants were contracting more when implanted on the vaginal wall, compared to abdominal wall. | (i) 30% of the 50 × 50 meshes caused vaginal erosion and exposure. |
HWPP: heavy weight polypropylene.
LWPP: lightweight polypropylene (also called soft); ePTFE: expanded polytetrafluoroethylene; PLGA: polylactide-co-glycolide acid; PLA: polylactide acid; PGA: polyglycolide acid.
Classification of synthetic materials used in pelvic floor reconstruction.
| Type | Mesh pore size | Structure | Polymer | Trade name | Company |
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| I | Macroporous | Monofilament | Polypropylene | Uretex | C. R. Bard |
| Gynecare TVT | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | ||||
| Bard Mesh | Bard/Davol | ||||
| SPARC | American Medical Systems | ||||
| In-Fast | American Medical Systems | ||||
| Monarc | American Medical Systems | ||||
| Lynx | Boston Scientific | ||||
| Advantage | Boston Scientific | ||||
| Obtryx | Boston Scientific | ||||
| Optilene | B. Braun | ||||
| Aris | Mentor Corp | ||||
| Perigee | American Medical Systems | ||||
| Parietene | Covidien | ||||
| Intepro | American Medical Systems | ||||
| Gynecare Prolift | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | ||||
| Surgipro | Covidien | ||||
| Prolene | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | ||||
| Prolene Soft | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | ||||
| Gynemesh PS | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | ||||
| Atrium | Atrium Medical | ||||
| Marlex | C. R. Bard | ||||
| Multifilament | Copolymer of glycolide (90%) and lactide (10%) | Vicryl | Ethicon, Johnson &Johnson | ||
| Polypropylene and polyglecaprone | Vypro | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | |||
| UltraPro | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | ||||
| Polyglycolic acid | Dexon | Davis and Geck | |||
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| II | Macroporous <10 | Multifilament | Expanded PTFF | GORE-TEX | W. L. Gore |
| Polyethylene terephthalate | Mersuture | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | |||
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| III |
Macroporous with microporous components | Multifilament | PTFE | Teflon | C. R. Bard |
| Polyethylene terephthalate | Mersilene | Ethicon, Johnson & Johnson | |||
| Polypropylene | IVS Tunneller | Tyco Healthcare | |||
| Woven polyester | Protegen | Boston Scientific | |||
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| IV |
Nanoporous | Multifilament | Silicon-coated polyester | Intermesh | American Medical Systems |
| Dura mater substitute | PRECLUDE MVP Dura substitute | W. L. Gore | |||
| Expanded PTFE, pericardial membrane substitute | PRECLUDE Pericardial Membrane | W. L. Gore | |||